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The Success Wound

The Success Wound

Season 1 Episode 112 Published 1 week, 5 days ago
Description

Why does the title never feel like enough? Why do so many of us hit every goal we set and still go to bed feeling like we came up short? My guest this week has a name for it. Brooke Taylor calls it the success wound, the pain that comes from mistaking our productivity and achievement for our worth. We get into where it comes from, why creative people are especially prone to it, and what it actually looks like to stay ambitious without running yourself into the ground. If you have ever caught yourself answering "How are you?" with "busy" and felt a little proud of it, this one is for you.

In this conversation, we cover

  • What the success wound is, and why Brooke describes it as a cultural wounding rather than a personal failing
  • Why "you are not your work" is so hard to live out when your work carries your worldview and your voice
  • How the meaning of hard work flipped over time, from a marker of the working class to a badge of status
  • The three things Brooke found that nearly all "unfulfilled achievers" share
  • Her own story: managing eighty million dollars in ad revenue at Google by twenty-four, and what it cost her
  • The difference between manic ambition and aligned ambition, and why they can look identical from the outside
  • The "two power sources" behind all ambition, and how to tell which one is running your engine
  • Two questions you can ask yourself this week to spot when you have slipped into the wound

Approximate timestamps

  • 00:00 Welcome and why this phrase stopped me in my tracks
  • 01:00 Defining the success wound
  • 03:00 Creativity as a conversation, and how the industrial age rewired our sense of worth
  • 05:00 How Silicon Valley resets your definition of "enough"
  • 06:00 The three things unfulfilled achievers have in common
  • 08:00 Brooke's story: Google, recovery, and a hard reckoning
  • 09:00 What organizations get out of the success wound, and the high achiever ceiling
  • 11:00 Choice, gears, and the two settings that lead to burnout
  • 12:00 Manic ambition vs. aligned ambition
  • 13:00 The lamp metaphor: the success wound or the true self
  • 14:00 Writing a book at 5 a.m. while pregnant, and why that was aligned, not manic
  • 16:00 Two questions to catch yourself in the wound
  • 17:00 Where to find Brooke

A few lines worth sitting with

Brooke describes the success wound as the pain that comes from tying our worth to what we produce and achieve, rather than to who we are.

On ambition, she offers a simple image: it runs on one of two power sources, the success wound or the true self. Same hard work, very different fuel.

And one telltale sign you are operating out of the wound, in her words, is that you keep repeating the same patterns and expecting them to feel different.

About Brooke Taylor

Brooke Taylor is a transformational career coach, keynote speaker, and the leading authority on the success wound, a phenomenon she pioneered through more than a decade of research. She began her career in Silicon Valley and spent years as a marketing lead at Google, where she earned the Google Global Sales Award. Her work helps high achievers move from manic ambition to aligned ambition so they can do meaningful work as whole people, not depleted ones.

Find Brooke

  • Website: brooketaylorcoaching.com
  • Free book exercises: brooketaylorcoaching.com/book
  • Instagram: @BrookeTheTaylor

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